Women Need to Be Monitored for High Blood Pressure After Giving Birth

Pregnant women are closely monitored in the hospital, but researchers say more needs to be done to see if their blood pressure remains high in the months after childbirth.

Mentally, physically, and emotionally, being pregnant can take a toll on a woman’s overall well-being. One of the other things it can affect is her heart health.

Women with preeclampsia are not being adequately monitored and are experiencing high blood pressure after they give birth. And researchers say it’s something the medical community seems to be missing.

A , a journal of the American Heart Association, found that lingering hypertension is common among women who have severe preeclampsia during their pregnancies.

In fact, many women don’t know they have elevated blood pressure after they deliver.

This presents a variety of risks.

A woman’s blood pressure is monitored in the hospital and it’s routinely taken when she visits her doctor for a check-up about six weeks after delivery.

What if the readings show all is well in a clinical setting, but her blood pressure is actually still high?

It turns out, that’s what’s going on, according to Dr. Laura Benschop, lead author of the study and researcher in obstetrics and gynecology at the Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands.

“We knew already that middle-aged women with previous severe preeclampsia have a three-fold increased risk of hypertension and up to seven-fold increased risk of cardiovascular disease,” Benschop told Dr.China.

“What we didn’t know is that the percentage of women with hypertension is already this high one year after their pregnancies and that a large percentage of women have an insufficient fall in systolic blood pressure during nighttime. [That’s] a condition which increases your risk of developing [cardiovascular disease],” she said.

Preeclampsia risks after birth

Preeclampsia is defined has having hypertension and elevated protein in one’s urine while pregnant.

It occurs in as much as 5 percent of pregnant women in developed countries.

Scientists already knew that women with the condition were more likely to have high blood pressure after delivery compared to women who maintained normal blood pressure during their pregnancies.

Benschop said many women have normal blood pressure readings when in their doctor’s office, but that doesn’t mean their levels don’t spike elsewhere.

Her team looked at the blood pressure readings of women with preeclampsia beyond the doctors’ offices to see if the condition is being overlooked.

Her team for one year after their pregnancies, monitoring their blood pressure during the day and night as well as taking readings at doctors’ offices.

More than 40 percent of the women had high blood pressure during the year after they delivered.

Most commonly, 17 percent had masked hypertension — normal blood pressure in the doctor’s office and high readings outside of the office.

Researchers found that without monitoring the women outside clinical facilities, doctors could have missed 56 percent of the women with high blood pressure.

Of those studied, 46 percent did not have a sufficient decrease in blood pressure from daytime to nighttime. And 42 percent of women experienced nighttime hypertension, which increases the risk of heart disease.

“Our findings suggest women who have high blood pressure during pregnancy should continue to monitor their blood pressure long after they’ve delivered their babies. It’s not only important to monitor blood pressure in the doctor’s office, but also at different times of the day and night, at home,” Benschop said.

The six-week visit check is not enough, she added.

“We could help to reduce this risk by monitoring and treating blood pressure directly after pregnancy in these women through 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring,” she said. “Women who know their numbers can take the proper steps to lower their blood pressure and avoid the health consequences of high blood pressure later in life.”

Pregnancy and heart health

In general, pregnancy puts stress on a woman’s heart and circulatory system, the reports.

Because blood volume goes up 30 to 50 percent to support the baby, a pregnant woman’s heart pumps more blood per minute and her heart rates increase.

Women who develop (prior to the 34th week of pregnancy) are more likely to have thickening in their heart’s left ventricle one month after delivery and therefore are at the greatest risk for developing heart disease, according to American Heart Association research presented last year.

presented the year before found that women who are pregnant at the age of 40 or older are at a greater risk of ischemic stroke, hemorrhagic stroke, heart attack, and death from cardiovascular disease later in life compared to women who are younger when they conceive.

A recent report also found that spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage, a rare type of stroke, is rising among pregnant women.

It most commonly occurs in women between the ages of 40 and 65, though African-American women ages 20 to 29 had the highest proportion.

Dr. Kaustubh Limaye, the lead researcher of that study and a clinical assistant professor of neurology at Carver College of Medicine at the University of Iowa, said that one reason for the spike may be due to better imaging technology.

Instead of panicking, women should report any sharp or sudden headache, he said.

“It is important for women who are pregnant to pay special attention to blood pressure because even women who never had high blood pressure may develop it during pregnancy,” added Dr. Randolph S. Marshall, chief of the stroke division at New York-Presbyterian Hospital.